Countdown to the Climate Summit

As competition for valuable natural resources
intensifies, the battle over land, forests and water is becoming ever more
deadly. Global Witness research has revealed
that every week at least two people are killed defending their land from
environmental destruction. These people are dying defending our planet, and
they need to be protected.

As world leaders gather for the UN climate
conference in Paris, Global Witness is profiling ten activists slain
this last year on our environmental
frontiers. The victims were all ordinary people who took a stand against the damage
wrought by industries like logging, mining, agribusiness and hydropower. Their murders
took place in the top ten most dangerous countries to be an environmental
defender.

Rigoberto Lima Choc - Guatemala

On 18th September 2015, Rigoberto
Lima Choc was shot dead in broad daylight opposite the courthouse
in Sayaxché, Guatemala. On the same day, three other activists - Hermelindo Asij, Lorenzo Pérez and Manuel
Mendoza - were kidnapped after allegedly receiving threats that they would be burned
alive.

Lima Choc and his colleagues were the
first to document the catastrophic environmental destruction caused by palm oil
company REPSA in the Río de la Pasión. Water pollution said to have been caused
by pesticides left thousands of fish dead and affected over 12,000 people,
leading the Ministry of the Environment and Natural Resources to describe
the incident as "ecocide...the most
serious environmental problem of its kind in national territory in living
memory.”

Lima Choc spearheaded the fight
against REPSA, first presenting a formal complaint to the authorities, then
appearing as a witness in a case against the palm oil company, which led to a
temporary suspension of its activities. "We want this impunity to end", Lima
Choc said at a press
conference in Guatemala City, “we’re
going to continue to struggle for the formal complaints we have already filed,
and continue to file formal complaints until we see where it takes us.”

REPSA have rejected accusations that
they caused the water pollution in the Río de la Pasión and have also
categorically rejected any link between the company and the
killing of Rigoberto Lima Choc.

We want this impunity to end.
- Activist Rigoberto Lima Choc at a press conference, three months before he was murdered.

Emerito Samarca, Dionel Campos and Bello Sinzo - Phillipines

On 1st September 2015, three
activists from the Lumad indigenous community in the Philippines were murdered –
allegedly by Magahat-Bagani Forces, a notorious paramilitary group. After
torching the village workshop, the militia warned the community that if they
did not leave the area they would all be massacred.

As villagers fled to a nearby
village, Emerito Samarca was ordered to stay behind. His body was found the
next day at the school he taught at, with stab wounds and his arms and legs
bound.

Dionel Campus and his cousin Bello
Sinzo were assassinated on the same night by the Maghat-Bagani, who peppered
them with bullets in front of their neighbours. Campus was the chairperson of
the indigenous group Mapasu, which campaigned against the encroachment of large-scale
mining and logging onto indigenous land and other human rights
violations against the Lumad people.

This triple-murder is part of a
worrying trend of Filipino indigenous activists being targeted for their
opposition to the country's mining industry – a sector that operates with
very little transparency and regularly fails to consult local communities.

Luis Marcía Ventura - Honduras

Luis Marcía Ventura was the fourth
activist to be killed in a spate of murders in a small indigenous community in
Locomapa, Northern Honduras. Since 2009, the indigenous Tolupán group has
been campaigning against the illegal mining and logging which has devastated their
communal forests. Following three murders in 2013 and a succession of
death threats, many community members went into hiding.

Luis Marcía Ventura was
killed just days after he had informed the police of continuing death threats
against his family. Two months after his death, another Tolupán leader was
killed, Erasio Vieda Ponce, allegedly by the same hitmen who have
outstanding arrest warrants for the 2013 killings. These suspects are still at
large in the community and continue to threaten those who dare take a stand.

Global Witness drew attention to
the plight of the Locomapa community in its April 2015 exposé How Many
More?, which found Honduras to be the world’s most dangerous country
per capita to be a land defender, with at least 101 people killed between 2010
and 2014.

Honduran indigenous peoples are being gunned down for simply defending their rights to their own land.
- Bill Kyte, campaigner with Global Witness.

Indra Pelani - Indonesia

22 year-old Indra Pelani was killed on
22nd February 2015 in central Sumatra, Indonesia. Pelani, a farmer
from Lubuk Mandarsah village, was an activist who had vocally opposed
a spate of land grabs that had left farmers landless.

Pelani was travelling to a rice
harvest festival with friend Nick Karim when they were stopped
by security guards contracted by a plantation company owned by
forestry giant Asia Pulp & Paper (APP). As an altercation with the
guards turned violent, Karim fled, seeking help. By the time he returned,
Pelani was gone.

Pelani's body was found the next day
in a nearby swamp, his hands and feet bound and his mouth gagged. APP owns over
2.4 million hectares of plantations in Indonesia,
and is facing 500 land claims from villages that are still unresolved. In a
statement, APP pledged assistance to the investigation into the death of Indra
Pelani, saying that it has “required PT Wira Karya Sakti to suspend all of the
personnel alleged to be involved in the incident including security officers,
the commander of the District Eight security team and the head of security at
contractor PT MCP.”

Chai Bunthonglek - Thailand

On 11th February 2015, Thai land
rights defender Chai Bunthonglek was gunned down in his home. The
unidentified gunman shot Chai six times in the head and chest, before escaping
on a motorcycle.

Chai was a veteran activist
campaigning to reclaim community land from a palm oil company that continues
to occupy villagers’ land despite owning a land lease that expired 15 years
ago. Chai's murder makes him the fourth activist from his community killed in
the last five years. Not one murderer has been brought to justice. Neither
local nor national authorities offered any protection to Chai or his colleagues
at the Southern Peasants’ Federation of Thailand despite the very real
risk of a deadly attack. According to Global Witness research, since 2001 22 environmental defenders have
been killed in Thailand.

Without the forest, we are not the Ka'apor...this is why we must defend it.
- Ka'apor community leader.

Eusebio Ka’apor - Brazil

On 26th April 2015 two hooded men
on a motorbike ambushed indigenous health worker Eusébio Ka’apor, fatally
shooting him in the back. The Ka'apor community believe that the assassins were
timber traffickers because shortly after Eusébio’s death his son was warned by
a logger that more people could die too.

The Ka'apor are an indigenous community who live in the Alto
Turiaçu indigenous reserve in Brazil’s Amazon rainforest, in an area which has
been ravaged by illegal loggers over three decades. Violence against the
community has ramped up over the past year after they shut down major logging
tracks.

As one Ka'apor leader told Survival
International, “there have been constant death threats against
us for a long time. Now they are even killing to intimidate us. They say it’s
better that we surrender our wood than more people die. We don’t know what to
do, because we have no protection. The state does nothing.”

Fernando Salazar Calvo - Colombia

On 7th April 2015 Fernando
Salazar Calvo was found dead, hours after a meeting on mining in central
Colombia. Calvo was an active member of the Embera Chamí indigenous group,
which has been conducting small-scale mining on their land for hundreds of
years. In the months before Calvo's murder, his colleagues had received threats
telling them to cease indigenous mining in the area. Illegal mining companies
and armed groups operate in the region looking to exploit indigenous-controlled
gold reserves. As it stands, no one has been arrested for Salazar Calvo's
murder.

According to Global Witness
research, at least 90 activists have been killed in Colombia since 2009, mostly
over the control and use of land.

Las Bambas mine
protests - Peru

On 29th September 2014, four people were shot dead and 17
wounded by police in a protest against a $7.4bn Chinese-owned copper mine in Las
Bambas in the Peruvian Andes. Police opened fire on a crowd of 2000 highland
farmers who were protesting against failures to consult them on building a
copper processing plant less than three miles from the mine's open pits. It was
also reported that
ambulances couldn't reach the local clinic following
the attack because police shot at a doctors’ vehicle. These deaths
came less than 5 months after construction worker Henry Checlla was
killed by police while protesting against the $1.4bn Tia Maria copper mine
in the southern Arequipa region. Local residents have opposed the mining
project since 2009, claiming it would pollute their water and
destroy local agriculture.

Juan Francisco
Martínez - Honduras

On 4th January 2015, Juan Francisco Martínez’s body was
found with multiple stab wounds to the chest, his hands tied with the laces of
military boots. Martínez was a prominent member of an indigenous Lenca
organisation which has opposed the construction of a number of
hydroelectric dams in central Honduras.

Martínez had taken a stand against the Los Encinos dam that is
being built on Lenca land without proper consultation with the indigenous
group. Colleagues of his had been kidnapped, received death threats and face
fabricated criminal charges for opposing the dam, which is owned by the husband
of Gladys Aurora López, Vice President of the Honduran Congress for the ruling
Nationalist party. Spouses of public officials in Honduras are forbidden by law
to profit from state concessions. Global Witness invited the dam company to
comment on the apparent breach of Honduran law on politicians’ personal
interests conflicting with public office but received no reply.

Raimundo dos
Santos Rodrigues - Brazil

25 years ago, the killing of
environmental activist Chico Mendes drew international attention to
the acute vulnerability of forest defenders in Brazil. Today, Brazil is one of
the most dangerous countries to be an environmental activist.

On 25th August 2015, two
unidentified men shot dead Raimundo dos Santos Rodrigues as he returned home
with his wife in Bom Jardim, Brazil. Rodrigues worked as an advisor
to the Chico Mendes Institute for Biodiversity Conservation and was
well-known for denouncing illegal logging and land-grabbing in indigenous
reserves. He had received numerous threats.

According to the Comissão Pastoral da Terra, in the
first quarter of 2015 22 of 23 Brazilian deaths in land conflicts happened in the
Amazon region.

Global Witness will be profiling an environmental defender a day in the ten days leading up to the UN climate conference in Paris. Please share these images from our Facebook and Twitter calling on governments to protect activists on the frontline of environmental defence.